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Atlanta (EIt|atnbrr of (fLamm^rrr. 







The territory within sixty miles of Atlanta has more population and produces 
more than any equal area between the Potomac, Ohio andl Mississippi Rivers. 
Its population exceeds that of the four States of New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada 
and Delaware, whose area is one-tenth of the United States, and more than 
any one of these seventeen States: Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode 
Island, North Dakota, South Dakota, Delaware, Florida, Montana, Idaho, 
Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and Oregon. 



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THE fAPITOL. 
OK GEORQIA 



ATLANTA. 



TLANTA air is 
like champagne; 
5 its people need 
no other stim- 
ulant. You can see it 
in their walk and hear 
it in their talk. Few die 
and none resign their 
citizenship— those who 
go away come back 
when they can. There 
is no place like Atlanta, 
and no tonic like the 
"Atlanta Spirit.' 



i.s a Xortlicrii cilv 



Atlanta is on the cre.st of the ridsc that divides the 
watershed of the Atkmtic from that of the Gulf, and an 
altitude of 1,050. feet above sea level gives the city a bracing 
atmosphere, which is conducive to vigor of body and mind, 
'i'iie ]ieople are remarkably energetic, and this is evident 
111 llie vi,-il(ir in the first glance that he gets from the car 
wiiiddws. "I'hcir vigor Iuh made .Vtlaiila a leader among 
cities. 

.\tlan(a's ncwspajiers are easily the lir-l in the Sunlli, 
and the lawyers, ministers and ]inife-,-i(iiial men rank 
liigii among their fellows. Naturally, the city is a center 
(if progress and development. 

.V great many people have the inipres-inii thai .\llauta 
in the heart nf the South, and it is fi'ei|ueiilly com|iared to 



By traoetar 




A UROUI' OF ATLAXTA 01-FI(-'E BUJLDl.VGS 



Clii(Mo<, nr New V,M-k. As a mali.T of t-icl, al.uiil u:> per ccnil. of its puoi.lc wm-. 
Ixini ill the Siiiillirni Slates. 

Tlu'iv aiv williiii 11k. city liniils 154,839 people. Tlir pn.portiou of those 
eiio-a-ed ni .^aiiifnl occiiiiatioiis is very lar-c and tlio >lcaclv iiuliistrv of tlir 
population is a tiuaraiily of coiiliiiiiiMl pi-o^pci-ily. 

'Fhc iiilciv-) wliich aUachrs (o .Vtlaiita's jiasl has drawn lo the eilv thous- 
ands ot men who liclpcl to make hi-^tory here many years aj^o. This constant 
visitation has caused .\llanla lo he talked ahout as no other .Southern city has 
heen (hiriiin the lih' of ihi- generation. 

Another attraction is llie ma.i^ieal .urowth which has never halted and 
never heen fully e.xiilained. hut seems to have in it somethiii.<i distinctive and 
ditl'ereiil from ihe rise of any other commniiily. There is an iiide.scribable 
somethiii- ahout the city which impre-c^ every slran-er and tills the mind of 
Ihe cilizeii with eiitliusiasm. 

.\ distineiiidied vi-ilor at the .\tlaiila Kxpo^iiion declared that the reo;ion 
surrouiidin- this cily i. ihc mo-t .\merican pari of .Vnierica. Idle uiastM-ful 
siiiril(if Ihe ,\u^lo-Sa.\on is manifest here in tli,. ma.t^nilicent reconstruction 
nl a (aly that was Imrned lo the jiround forty-hnir years ago. In the surronnd- 
iiie country the lisini; tide of industry has overliowed and ohliterated the scars 
of war. (leneral Sherman's army destroyed a liundred millions of property on 





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(* *S* I % 



yi'liMfli 




ATLANTA 

TKRMINAL 

STATION 




its march llirdugli (leorgia, and it took many years lo make gnod the loss, liut 
now the State produces, in one year, enough cotton and cotton goods to pay the 
enormous indemnity of that campaign. 

(ieneral Sherman was imi>ressed witli Atlanta's strategic importance, and 
jioiiitcd out that any port of the Gulf or South Atlantic could be reached from 
here in twelve hours. The city became headciuarters for the Deiiartment of the 
Gulf during the Spanish-American war, and an ett'ort was afterwards made to 
remove these headquarters to another point. Iml the goverinnent, profiting by 
that experience, has finally fixed their scat here. 

The topographic conditions which gave Atlanta its importance in war 
have made it the railway and conunercial center of the Southeast. 

Atlanta stands at a point where the Eastern traffic, (lowing down the Ap])a- 
lachian chain, meets in confluence the great stream of connuerce from the West 
to the Southern seaboard. The vast traffic of East and West which flows into 
Atlanta raihates through the Southeast. Thus, from a railway ]ioint of view, 
Atlanta holds a. commaiuhng position and has become the headquarters for a 
large part of the railroad business done in the Southeastern States. 

As the metropolis of the Piedmont region, Atlanta will profit by the great 
stimulus to trade and industry which will come from the opening of the Pana- 
ma canal. There are already large exports of cotton goods to China from Geor- 



RN'flI>ISH 
AMEHTCA X 
Bl,-II,D1N'(; 





EMPIRE 
B I- 1 L. D I N ( 



o'ia, and llir CaniliiiaH. and llii- Iradc will urnw rapidly wlicu (he >li(iii roulc (o 
the Pacific is oiiencd. 

From Ciiiciuiiati. Ilii' Ohio Kivcr .ualcway of Ihc ]iroductivc Mi(hlle West, 
the shorU'st jiracticahic loiilc to the Panama canal is throutih Athuda, and the 
Louisvilk' and NaslniUc Pailway lias spent many million- in huildini; a new 
trunk hno l)etwcen tlics<' cilic-. The Southern Railway, the .Seaboard Air-Line, 
the Allaida, Hirminnham and Atlantic, tlie Central of Georgia and other sys- 
ten]s are connecting u]) their trunk lines through Atlanta to the Atlantic, the 
Mississijipi, and the (iulf. and this city is on the great highway of American 
goods mo\'ing soutinvard to the sea. 

In the anticipation of tiie immense growth of husiness, the railroad com- 
panies are sjiending nn'llions of dollars to enlarge their terminal facilities in 
r.nd anaind Atlanta. The heauliful nrw pa-senger depot was erected hy the 
SiMithern liail\\a\- and a-socialed lines, and large e.\ten>ion< of freight ter- 
nniuds are being made by the Southern and the Louisville and Nashville sy.— 
tems. 

l"he system of local transit, covering IS? miles of electric railway, is one 
of the best in the coinilry. and i- probably the most ^■xtensive for a city of At- 
lanta's size. This has caused a rapid extension of the residence district and 
beautiful homes have been erected several miles beyond the city limits in .sev- 
eral directions. 




CEXTURY RUr I.DI N'fi 



CAyrH^ER BUILDIXO 



FOl'ltTH NATIOXAL BAjjKl BI.DG 



Steel and stone skyscrapers have shot uj) in rai)id sneeession and the heart 
of the eily looks like the lower part of Ahmhattan Island. There is no other 
city in the Sonth that has the metropolitan appearance Atlanta presents. It 
has one sqnare mile that can hardly l)e equalled anywhere on this continent 
out.side of New York. Chicago and Philadelphia. 

Atlanta is Southern headquarters for most of the great national corpora- 
tions that do business in this section. It is the third insurance center of the 
country, and easily t.ie first in the Simlh. llailways, telegraphs, telephones 
and many such interests have liri-c Ihcir hcaihiuarters for from five to twelve 
States. 

The growth of the eily is liy ud means confined to oflice buildings. The 
manufactured ]irodiicts of Fulton county, including Atlanta, increased from 
fifteen to thirty millions from 1900 to 1905 and are now estimated at .f50,000,- 
000. There are nearly twice as many wage-workers and the city is constantly 
crowded with well-to-do strangers who have come to engage in business. At- 
lanta's importance as a business center is indicated by the fact that Georgia 
produces a cotton croj) worth $150,000,000, or more than the gold product of 
the entire country. The States making up the Southeastern group, of which 
Atlanta is the natural center, produce a cotton crop worth about five hundred 
millions, and turn out cotton goods worth one hundred and fifty millions. 
The total manufactured product of these States is 600 millions. The supply 




TJIE ATLAXTA AU DITORI IM-AKMOR V 



lju~ine.~s for all this vit-:t iudustrv i? iuiiiieii,-:e, and ^Vtlaiita gets a large share 
of it. 

A strong feature of Atlanta's industry is its variety. The people are hos- 
]uta])le to new ideas and are not fastened in old grooves. Home industries are 
well patronized, and the i)ereentage of sueeess in new industries is very high. 

I'he aetivily of the Cham her of ( 'oiiniiciee iia- h;id a h:ippy eH'eel upon the 
spirit of unity and co-iipcralinn among husiuess men. .\ eiislom of fi-(M|uent 
nieelings to talk over matters of general welfare or mutual coneern has develop- 
ed the husiness men of this eily in a remarkahle way. '1 he Chamber of Com- 
meree has on eommercial Afliuita very mueh the same intluenee whieh the 
New England town meeting had on the sturdv ))ioneers in the land of steady 
hal)its. This intluenee is educational along the line of ruhust self-government 
and co-operation, and in the midst of Ihe contact of minds a super)) s]iiril of 
civic pride is generated. 

Atlanta is a clean, well-governed city. 'I'he tax rale is only 1 1-4 per cent. 
on a moderate valuation of projierty. which aggregates !f lo(),-tS0,4!IS. The 
United States census credits .\tlanta with the lowest tax rate with two excep- 
tions, on actual value to he fotnid in IIk." South, among cities of over 100,(1(111 
jiopidation. ^\'hile the nominal rate is 1.25 it amounts to only .7.3 on real 
value. The bonded debt of .$5,"24o,500 is le.ss than the constitutional limit by 




VIEW OP P..,.„x„,, ,,.„ 3,„,„ .XKE.TS, . ooKi.r, SO.XH 



over three millioii.-:. It is covered by a sinkiii.y fund \\hi(di provides for the 
payment of all bonds within 30 years from the date of issue. 

The fire, jioliee, sanitary and other departments arc ccondinically adminis- 
tered and al>ly managed by efficient chiefs, with the sujipDii nf able boards of 
business men. 

The cil\' i~ di\idrd intd ten ward-, each re|ire-ciilrd by one aldcriiian ami 
t\v(i councibiien. On all apprnpi-iatiiin< a majnrity nf Ibc alclci-niauic Imard 
and the cnuncil in ^eparate scs^inns mu-t be given. 

The watt'r supply is taken froni Ibc ('iiattalioochee Paver, clarified in a 
settling l)asin and filtered before licini; pumped into the city. The I'ate to resi- 
(U'uts is ()() c(Mils ])er nidnlli fur each bouse, and for manufacturers (> cents per 
thousand gallons. 

Electric power fur \,iricd industries i- available in and amund Atlanta 
tbi'iiuijh the dcveldpniciil i)f a large water power on the ('battaboochee River, 
18 miles from the city, at Morgan Falls, where a massive ma.sonry and con- 
crete dam lias l)een !)uilt l)y the Atlanta Water and Electric Power Co., and ma- 
chinery has been inslalle(l fni' Ibc development of water power and its tran.s- 
niission inio cicclrie eurrcnl, which i< transmitted to Atlanta. Part of it is 
used b>' Ibc (iciirLiia Hailwax' and l''lcelric (^>m]lany. and the i-emainder is dis- 
tributed In njamil'ai'turt'rs l)v the same concern. 








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EQUITABLE BUILUIXO 



Atlanta is the greatest ]mli!ic:iti()ii e(>iilrr In tlic South. The records at 
the Post Oftice De]iartiiiiMil -how that tl:c vari(ju- iiulihcatioii,- pay the Goverii- 
iiieut more on secoiid-cla-,- nialtcr llian it rccci\cs from houisville, New Or- 
leans, San Francisco or Pittshuru. In other rc-])ccls the records of the post- 
ottice show a renjarkahle .growth. A t^ivat factor in the uphuildiiii; of the city 
is its civic pride. However they may lie di\-ided on all other (pii'stions, the 
])eople are a unit on everythin,ii; that affects the prosperity of the city. The 
sentiment is so jironiuuiced that it \\a< louf; ago emjihasized l)y the name ''At- 
lanta Spirit,' and the appeal to this -jiiril i.~ never in vain. 

In some r(>si)ects this city is the most im]Hirtaut educational center of the 
South. Over 21,017 ]ai]iils are enrolled in the |ad)lic schools and (i.OOO students 
entered in institutions of higher education. The linest polytecdmic iirstitution 
in the ScaUh is the (Jeornia "Tech." and its u,raduates hold ini])ortant jxisitions 
all over the world. There an- 'i'iS churches, six theatres, several libraries, nu- 
merous parks and many heautifnl reMdenee streets. (Ireen fira.ss, spacious 
lawns and shade trees which arch ihi' -treet in many places, are features which 
add much to the charm,- of .Vtlanta'- homes. 

.\tlanla lia- foi- many year- lieen known as tiie Convention City of the 
South, and the city lia- some of the he-t hotels in the I'nited States. The 
PieduKMit. Kindiall and Aras^on all entertained Presidents of the United States, 
and the .Maji'-tie and Mariiai are well known. The Geort;ian Teri'ace, a maa- 



nificent tourist hotel of firejiroof foiistruction, in the heart of the beautiful 
Peachtree residence district is nearing completion, and the Iin])erial, another 
new fireproof hotel, at the junction of Peachtree and Ivy Streets, will he open 
for business in a few months. 

The city, in co-operation with public-spirited citizens, led by the Chamber 
of Commerce, has recently completed the finest Auditorium-Armory in the 
Southern States. It seats 6,500 people and has a smaller hall for conventions, 
seating 900. 

Atlanta has long been noted for its delightful climate, and the city has 
become a great resort for tourists and health-seekers. It is hard for people 
from higher latitude? to realize that Atlanta is a summer resort, cooler by far 
than the average American city. There are summers here as elsewhere, but 
not long ones, and the nights are almost always cool and breezy. Very few 
even of the days are uncomfortably warm. 

The suburbs, so easily accessible in every direction by rapid transit, are 
pictures of restfulness and refreshment. There are golf links, beautiful drives, 
lakes and beautiful country clubs, know'n as the Piedmont Driving Club, and 
the Atlanta Athletic Club. 




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